One of the flies in the ointment for Google, in terms of its plans for mobile world domination via Android, has been the fragmentation of the user experience. It has repeatedly tried to unify this, to improve quality control, to provide predictability for users and developers, and to insist on a platform that is optimal for its services and the way it believes people should use the mobile Internet. But while it has imposed some uniformities, at least on any partner which wants to enable the core Google services on the open source operating system, the largest Android device makers have still gone their own way in terms of the user experience. Huawei, which (despite its challenges) overtook Samsung as…